A Real Life Alligator in Beaver Run . Reservoir in Bell Twp Pa. ?

Yes the summer of 2011 was an interesting one in Bell Twp in Westmoreland County when an Alligator was spotted swimming in the closed to the public Beaver Run Reservoir  by Reservoir employees. The waters which provide drinking water to parts of Westmoreland County .
I some times take Pa 286 as a short cut up to US 22 and one day while riding by there was all kind of news
 and police on scene so  I knew something was up and there surely was. 




 Apparently some one had a pet alligator which got too big and it was released into the reservoir. spotted twice during the summer of 2011 it has not been seen since and the extreme cold makes the chance it survived the winter of 2011 highly unlikely .  While the reservoir was off limits to public there was still plenty to worry about with family's which lived near it . Yes there have always been rumors of alligators in sewers which is nothing more than a myth they can not survive long in the waste water , but snakes have been found usually dead. the carcass of a very large python was found in a city of Pittsburgh  sewer in Overbrook when I was a kid  in the 60's I remember the picture in the Pittsburgh Press and knew the city worker who found it.


A strange looking building in downtown Pittsburgh with a smoke stack and a story to tell

Photo credit PACT Web Site
Thousands of people go by this strange looking building and smoke stack  along Fort Duquesne Blvd. on a daily basis and never give it a second thought  but it serves an important function and also saw a drama play out which would result in the rewarding of the Carnegie Heroes medal to a smoke stack worker who saved a fellow worker.






Once much taller when the smoke stack burned coal Now of days it burns Oil or Natural Gas this was one of 2 plants that produced steam to heat buildings and there hot water systems in the down town area.  which where once known as Allegheny County Steam Heat Company which was a subsidiary of Duquesne Light Company .



http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1144&dat=19760229&id=5uAhAAAAIBAJ&sjid=J1gEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6474,3309755

Back in the day it was much more pollution wise and economic wise to have centralized steam provided by one stack instead of several hundred separate operating coal fired  boilers .


But as time and technology rolls on it became cheaper for some buildings to go it on there own and install there own boilers and disconnect from the system which ended up being rescued and now operates as a non profit   Pittsburgh  Allegheny County Thermal. Ltd.
http://pacthermal.com/about-us.html
 

How ever the real story of this building goes way back to 1948when the stack and building where being being repaired and scaffolding collapsed and involved tremendous courage and heroics by one of the workers to save another several hundred feet up in the air Which resulted in the awarding of the Carnegie hero medal 




The rescue is unbelievable when a boatswain  chair collapsed and a worker from Avalon Ross Chapman  hanging by one leg on one rung of a ladder  rescued a fellow worker.





Ironically he saved the same worker Samuel Hopkins   years earlier in a flag pole mishap on a different job site on Private  Brunot Island which Duquesne Light maintains a large power plant .

While never considering himself a hero Mr. Chapman surely was. 

Bizzare Coincidence ? involving construction of 2 Scrubber Smoke stacks and 2 unfortunate deaths

With the tightening of EPA rules on the amount of emissions being allowed from Coal Burning Power Plants 2 plants in the valley below me in towns next to each other  along the Allegheny River  the first plant owned by West Penn Power in Springdale which is now run on Natural Gas   and the 2nd Plant owned at one time by Duquesne Light Company   in Cheswick now owned by Gen On  decided to install new scrubber smoke stacks to help comply with the new rules.
I actually got a close up look at the Springdale Plant in 1974 when I was on a canoe trip from Tionesta Pa to Pittsburgh 150 miles  and we stayed in an old abandoned Spring dale  boat clubs grounds behind the plant 

The Springdale plant was first to start  the enormous 300 ft stack and it was almost finished when the unthinkable happened and a worker building the stack fell to his death inside the stack.
The former  volunteer fire chief  where I once volunteered was the responding paid  medic that day and was among the first responders from emergency agency's to arrive.



Springdale plant  with scrubber stack old stack removed


 It was a horrifying scene when he arrived something you hope you never see again in your life time Yet like dejavue it would happen again  and on the same day of the week and the former chief would be first medic unit on the scene since this was his normal scheduled work day and area he worked. .

When another worker fell to his death at the power  plant in Cheswick a few miles down from the Springdale plant.
Old smoke stack to left new scrubber stack on right  Cheswick plant
Aprox. a year later when  this  scrubber stack was almost finished  talk about creepy coincidence

 OSHA investigated both sites and they where nothing more than accidents . Nothing sinister at all involved  yet for such an accident to happen twice in same area cane be called nothing more than bizarre.